[INDEX.]

A
Acland, Sir Thomas Dyke, i. [98].
Acton Church, Godolphin tombs at, i. [353].
Adams, Mr., the astronomer, ii. [226] note.
Africa, remarks on access to the interior of, and its probable results, ii. [216], [217].
Albalanda family, i. [194], [195].
Albercombe, ii. [6] note.
Alford, Dean, his lines on Martyn, ii. [239].
ALLEN, RALPH, his birthplace and parentage, i. [3].
appointment to the Post Office, [4].
detects a Jacobite plot, [4].
marries Miss Earl, [4].
invents cross-posts, [5].
his enormous profits by it, [5]-[8].
his Coombe Down quarries, [8].
Mayor of Bath, [8].
portraits of him, [8], [17].
builds mansion at Prior Park, [9].
his literary and social friends, [9].
his connexion with Fielding, [9].
do. with Pope, [3], [10], [16]-[18].
do. with Warburton, [10].
do. with General Wade, [4], [13].
do. with Pitt, [13]-[15].
his second wife, [14].
his political views, [16].
raises a corps of volunteers, [16], note.
his generosity, [17]-[19], note.
house at Weymouth, [18].
house at Bathampton, i. [18].
his building propensities, [19].
his son Philip comptroller of the Bye-Letter Office, [22].
buried at Claverton, [22].
his personal appearance, [23].
his character, [24], [25].
his descendants, [25], [26].
Almanza, battle of, ii. [174].
its peculiar features, [175].
Alverton (Penzance), i. [293].
Amerideth, Judith, i. [351].
Amherst, General, at Louisbourg, i. [224].
Anderson, his opinion of George Grenville as a poet, ii. [83].
Anne, Queen, Godolphin's administration of her affairs, i. [379].
Anson, Lord, his jealousy of Admiral Boscawen, i. [215], [216] note, [220].
ANSTIS, JOHN, his extraction, i. [29].
his birthplace, [30].
his various appointments, [30]-[32].
his works on Heraldry, [30], [31].
created Garter King at Arms, [30].
his fragments of a history of Cornwall, [31].
do. of Launceston, [31].
his MSS. and other works, [31].
his imprisonment, [31], [32].
his death and burial-place, [32].
his son and successor in office, [32].
his portraits, [33].
his wife, [33].
buys Tremodret, [46] note.
See also [Errata and Addenda].
Antrewan family, i. [344].

Apreece, Mrs., i. [269].
Argallez, or Arallas, manor of, ii. [285].
Arthur. King, [xiv].
ARUNDELLS. Their origin and early importance, i. [19], [42].
settlement in Cornwall, [37], [41], [77].
origin of the name, [39], [40]; ii. [5], [39].
their connexion with the Grenvilles, i. [87].
do. with Lanherne, [45].
of Tolverne, [99]-[102], [195].
their connexion with Tolverne, [46].
Sir John, of Tolverne, ii. [124].
of Trerice, i. [76]-[99].
their connexion with Trerice, [46].
of Wardour, their origin, etc., [56], [57].
Sir Ralph, [41].
John, builder of part of St. Columb church, [41].
often Sheriffs of Cornwall, [41].
Sir John, the magnificent, [43]. his will, [43].
Roger (temp. Will. I.), [45].
William, [45].
John (temp. Richard II.), [47].
his descendants, [54].
his violation of a nunnery, [47].
his shipwreck and death, [48].
Thos. Walsingham's account, [47].
Froissart's account, [48].
Sir John (temp. Hen. IV. and V.), [50]-[101].
Sir John (temp. Hen. VI.), his riches, [50].
John, Bishop of Exeter, [50].
John, Bishop of Chichester, [53].
Sir John, knight-banneret of Therouenne, [54].
his wife and daughter, [55].
Mary, the authoress, [55].
Sir John, patron of Father Cornelius, [55].
his daughters, Dorothy and Gertrude, [56].
his son, [72].
Sir Thomas, Count of the Empire, and first Baron Arundell of Wardour, [58].
Humphrey, leader of the Cornish rebellion, [59].
George, a recusant, [73].
Sir Oliver de, i. [80].
Sir John, of Trerice (temp. Hen. V.), [80].
besieges St. Michael's Mount, [81].
is killed on the sands there, [81].
Sir John, 'Jack of Tilbury,' [82]-[103].
buried at Stratton, [87].
his son Roger, [85].
his grandson John, [85].
Raynulfe (temp. Hen. III.), [87], [101] note.
Sir Thomas, a Commissioner for the suppression of religious houses, [88].
his grant from Henry VIII. of the Scilly Isles, [90].
committed to the Tower, [88].
executed on Tower Hill, [89].
Sir John (temp. Elizabeth), [90].
Sir John, 'John for the King' (temp. Chas. I.), defender of Pendennis Castle, [91], [95], [97].
his gallant letter to Fairfax, [93].
Richard, Lord Arundell of Trerice, [91], [95], [96].
Lord John, his son, [97].
the Honble. Richard, M. P., [98].
his appointments, [98].
Lady Francis, during the earthquake of 1750, [98].
Sir Thomas, of Tolverne, [101].
Thomas, Esq. (will dated 1552), [102].
John (will dated 1598), [102].
Sir Thomas, of Tolverne (temp. James I.), [102].
Colonel John (temp. Charles II.), [102].
THE MINOR, [103].
Robert, of Menadarva, [103].
Francis, of Trengwainton, [104].
Captain Francis (temp. Commonwealth), [104].
of Trevithick, [105].
Thomas (temp. 1620), [105].
decay of the family, [105].
William, marries Dorothy Palæologus, [106].
Charles, one of the last of the name, [106].
See also [Errata and Addenda].
Arwenack, i. [92].
Arwenack, ii. [117], [119], [120], [126], [127], [130] note, [148].
B
Bacon, Lord, on Biographies, [x].
his observation on the last fight of the Revenge, ii. [98].
ii. [148] note.
Bael, Jemima, ii. [153].
Baker, his opinion of Foote, i. [312].
Ballard, his reference to Anne Killigrew, ii. [195].
Barfell (see Varfel).
Barrowby, Dr., his description of Foote, i. [316].
Bartolozzi, his portrait by Opie, ii. [245] note.
BASSET FAMILY, ii. [5], [39], [281], [283].
their Norman origin, i. [111]-[112].
Cove, alias Portreath, [115]-[134].
Sir Arthur, [118] note.
Francis, Baron de Dunstanville and Basset, [111], [112], [130]-[136].
Frances, Baroness, [136].
Sir Francis, M.P., Sheriff and Vice-Admiral of Cornwall, and Governor of St. Michael's Mount, [118].
his letters to his wife, [92], [120], [121].
Colonel Francis, a Puritan, [123].
Francis, Sheriff of Cornwall, 1708, [123], [197].
Francis, M.P. (temp. 1730), [125].
George, M.P., son of Sir John Basset, of Umberleigh, [118].
General Sir Thomas, [118] note.
Gilbert, [113] note.
Gustavus Lambert, [130], [136].
William, of Ipsden, [113].
J., (temp. 1435), [115].
Sir John (temp. 1478), [114].
J. P. (temp. 1734), [116].
John, the Rev., [128].
John, M.P., his son (died 1843), [128].
John, of Tehidy, sells St. Michael's Mount, ii. [285] note.
John, Sheriff of Cornwall, (temp. Hen. VII.), i. [117], [174].
John, son of Vice-Admiral Sir Francis, [122].
Sir Lawrence (temp. 1277), [115].
Osmund (temp. Will. I.), [112].
Osmund (temp. Hen. I.), i. [111].
Ralph (temp. Edward I.), [114].
Sir Ralph, father of Osmund, Justiciary of Hen. I., [111].
Thomas, his son, Justiciary of Hen. III., [113].
Thurstan, [111].
William (temp. Hen. IV.), [114].
Sir William (temp. 1382), [115].
William (temp. Edw. III.), [114].
Bateman, Viscount, an early friend of Opie, ii. [251].
Bath (see Allen).
Bathampton Church, restored by Ralph Allen, i. [22].
a tablet there to his memory, [22].
Bathurst, Dr., Bishop of Norwich, i. [131].
'Bayliffe of Blackmore,' The, i. [195].
Beaumont, Rev., his life of Dean Grenville, ii. [80] note.
Beddoes, Dr., i. [255].
Bedruthan steps and sands, ii. [310].
Beling, Richard, assumes name of Arundell, i. [58].
Berippa, Manor of, ii. [285].
Berkeley House, i. [372] note.
Berkeley, Lord and Lady, i. [372].
Bernard, his remarks on Incledon, ii. [91].
Betham, Elizabeth, i. [144].
Bevill family, i. [344]; ii. [5], [6], [10], [30], [281].
Bevill, Mary, i. [87].
Bewes family, their connexion with Anstis, i. [33].
Bibliotheca Cornubiensis, [xii]., [288], [353] note; ii. [5].
Bideford, ii. [4].
Blagge, pedigree of the family, i. [370] note.
Blagge, Margaret (see Margaret Godolphin), i. [362].
Blazey, St., i. [3].
Bligh (or Blygh) of Bodmin, i. [140].
Admiral Sir Richard Rodney, i. [140].
BLIGH, ADMIRAL WM., i. [139]-[147].
a Cornish circumnavigator, [139].
his birthplace and parentage, [140].
sails with Captain Cook in the Resolution, [140].
becomes a lieutenant in the navy, [140].
commands the Bounty, and sails for Otaheite, [141].
is seized and cast adrift by his crew, i. [141].
reaches Timor, [141].
reaches England, [142].
his skill, resource, and courage, [142].
account of the voyage, [142] note.
is made Post Captain, and appointed to the Providence, [142].
sails for the Society Islands, [142].
receives gold medal of the Society of Arts, [142].
at the mutiny at the Nore, [143].
his naval services, [143].
receives Nelson's thanks at Copenhagen, [143].
is elected F.R.S., [143].
is appointed Governor of New South Wales, [143].
his arbitrary temper leads to his deposition and imprisonment, [144].
is made Rear-Admiral of the Blue, [144].
dies at Farningham, [144].
his wife, [144].
his children, [145], [146].
his character, [145].
his interview with George III., [145].
his house at Farningham, [146].
his ghost! [147].
Blowing-house, ii. [245] note.
Blue-Stocking Club, its origin, i. [239].
Boaden, his account of Opie, ii. [276].
Boase, G. C., [xii].
Boase, Rev. C. W., his Registers of Exeter College, [xii]., ii. [5].
Bodmin, i. [368].
Bochym, Robert, of Bochym, i. [64].
Boconnoc Park, ii. [43] note.
Bodrugan, [ix].
Bolton, Charles I., Duke of, i. [176].
BONAVENTURA, THOMASINE, i. [151]-[157].
her connexion with the City of London churches, [151], [152].
do. with Stratton Church, [153].
her college and chantry, [153]-[156] note.
her birthplace, [154].
her first husband, [154].
builds a bridge to his memory, [155].
her second husband, i. [155].
her third husband, [156].
is Lady Mayoress of London, [156].
retires to Week St. Mary, [156].
her fancied relation to John Dineham, [157].
Carew's account of her bounteous charity, [157].
makes her will in 1510, [156].
suppression of her chantry, [157].
Bone, C. K., i. [166].
BONE, HENRY, R.A., i. [161]-[166].
his parentage, [161].
as china-painter, [161], [162].
marries Elizabeth Vandermeulen, [163].
first exhibits at the Royal Academy, [163].
large size of his enamels, [163], [164].
is elected a R.A., [164].
sells one of his enamels for 2,200 guineas, [164].
his series of historical portraits, [164].
his various residences in London, [164] note.
receives the Academy pension, [165].
sales of his works, [165].
his death, [165].
his family, [165].
his character, [166].
J. J. Rogers's list of his works, [166].
his portraits, [166]; ii. [245] note.
Henry Pierce, i. [165].
Peter, [166].
Robert Trewick, [166].
Thomas, [166].
W., [166].
Walter, [161].
See also [Errata and Addenda].
Bonython, [xiv]. and note, i. [99], [347].
Borlase, Captain in King Charles I.'s army, ii. [39] note.
Colonel William, i. [171].
John, of Pendeen, i. [172], [173].
Dr. J. B., i. [253].
Humphry, created a peer by James II., i. [172].
Dr. Walter, i. [178], [179].
BORLASE, REV. DR. WM., i. [169]-[187].
origin of the family, [170].
meaning of the name, [171].
his birthplace and parentage, i. [172].
his youth and education, [174], [175].
goes to Exeter College, Oxford, [175].
his sketch of Oxford in his own days, [175].
his journey to Cornwall with Sir John St. Aubyn, [176]; ii. [287].
is presented to Ludgvan, [176],
to St. Just, [179].
his favourite authors, [177].
his correspondents, [181].
his mode of studying the Cornish antiquities, [177].
his wife, [177].
his companions, [180].
his squabble with Rev. John Wesley, [179].
elected F.R.S., [181].
prints his Cornish Antiquities, [182].
do. his account of the Scilly Islands, [182].
do. his 'Natural History of Cornwall,' [182].
is made LL.D., [183].
his old age and last pursuits, [183].
his death and epitaph, [185].
his family, [185].
his view of Godolphin Hall, [341].
Burgess, i. [171] note.
Bosaverne, Thomasine, an ancestress of Richard Lander, ii. [201].
Boscastle, ii. [4].
BOSCAWENS, THE, i. [99], [191]-[206], [345].
their origin, [192].
BOSCAWEN, ADMIRAL, i. [191], [202], [205], [206]-[237].
his birthplace and youth, [207].
his portrait, [207].
enters the navy, [207].
his determined courage, [209].
at Porto Bello, [210].
at Carthagena, [211].
marries Frances Evelyn Glanville, [213].
elected M.P., [214].
captures the French frigate Medea, [214].
is wounded off Cape Finisterre, [215].

Anson's jealousy of him, [215], [216] note, [220].
sails for Port Louis and Pondicherry, i. [217].
is made Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty, [219].
his action with the French off Cape Ray, [220].
takes M. Hocquart prisoner for the third time, [221].
commands a squadron in the Bay of Quiberon, [222].
attacks and captures Louisbourg, [223] et seq., [227] et seq.
rejoicings thereupon in London, [225].
receives the thanks of Parliament, [226].
action with the French in Lagos Bay, [229] et seq.
his tactics, [231] note.
his later honours, [233].
at Quiberon again, [234].
his death, epitaph, and character, [234]-[237].
Boscawen, Capt. in King Charles I.'s army, ii. [39] note.
Charles, barrister, i. [193].
Edward (temp. Charles II.), i. [196].
Edward Hugh, M.P., i. [202].
Elizabeth, Duchess of Beaufort, i. [204].
Edward, fourth Viscount and first Earl, i. [202].
Evelyn, sixth Viscount, i. [206].
Frances (Honble. Mrs. J. Leveson Gower), i. [204].
George Evelyn, third Viscount Falmouth, i. [133], [202], [203].
General John, i. [200].
Honble. George, at Dettingen and Fontenoy, i. [200].
George Henry, fifth Viscount and second and last Earl, i. [205].
Henry de (1292), i. [193].
BOSCAWEN, THE HON. MRS. i. [133].
the 'blue-stocking,' [205].
her fondness for the sea, [237].
her parentage, [238].
her character, [238].
her membership of the Blue-stocking Club, [239].
Boswell's opinion of her, [239].
her vivacity, [240].
her politics, [240].
her latter days and death, [241]-[243].
her remarks on Opie's portrait of Lady Jerningham, ii. [261].
Hugh (temp. Will. III.), Baron Boscawen Rose and Viscount Falmouth, i. [197].
Sir Hugh, M.P. (1626), i. [196].
Hugh, second Viscount, i. [198].
Hugh, M.A., i. [192].
Hugh (temp. Mary), i. [192] note, [195].
John de, i. [194].
John Francis, Sheriff of Cornwall in 1861, i. [130].
Lawrence (temp. Hen. VII.), i. [194] note.
Lieutenant, at Tel-el-Kebir, i. [211] note.
Mary, i. [200].
Nicholas, D.D., Dean of Buryan, i. [199].
Nicholas, a Parliamentarian, i. [196].
Colonel Nicholas, at battle of Braddock Down, ii. [286].
Richard (temp. Hen. VII.), i. [195].
Rose, i. [193].
Street, Truro, i. [196].
William, the author, i. [200].
William Glanville, i. [202].
Bounty, Mutiny of the, i. [139]-[141].
Boyer, Mayor of Bodmin, i. [70].
Braddock Downs, i. [91].
battle of, [121]; ii. [43], [286].
Braham, his relations to Incledon, ii. [98], [101].
Brande, the chemist, on Davy's death, i. [248].
Bray family, i. [114], [171].
Bread-fruit, i. [140], [142].
Breage, i. [340], [377].
Bridges, Sir Egerton, his account of young Sidney Godolphin, i. [360].
Brierly, Mr. O. W., his picture of the last fight of the Revenge, ii. [26].
Brinn, ii. [30].
Bristol china, i. [161].
Bristol, Cornish at the siege of, ii. [52] note.
Brompton, Chronicum of Johannis de, ii. [281].
Browne, Sir Thomas, on our forefathers, [viii].
Browne, Sir William, caricatured by Foote, i. [329].
Brunel, his opinion of Trevithick's genius, ii. [323].
Buckingham, Duke of, his quarrel with Harry Killigrew, ii. [179].
Bude, i. [82].
Budock, St., the church, ii. [116], [118] note, [119].
Bullers, The, ii. [283].
Bunn, Mary, first wife of Opie, ii. [255].
Bunsby, Richard, i. [154].
Burdo, Adolphe, his description of the Niger, ii. [205].
Burgoyne, General, i. [294].
Buryan, i. [193], [194] note, [199] and note.
Bynnamy, ii. [6] note.
Byron, Honble. Ada, i. [98].
Byron's poem, 'The Island,' i. [143].
Lord, his verses on Davy, i. [271].
C
Camden on the origin of the St. Aubyns, ii. [281].
Campbell, Duncan, the Scotch pirate, i. [82].
Carankan family, i. [345].
Cararthyn family, i. [345].
Cardew, Dr. Cornelius, i. [250], [253]; ii. [225] note.
Carews, The, [xiv]. i. [345].
Carew, Sir Gawen, i. [61].
Sir Peter, i. [68]; ii. [121].
Richard, on the Arundells, i. [79], [83]-[86], [90], [102].
marries an Arundell, i. [86].
his account of Thomasine Bonaventura's chantry and college at Week St. Mary, i. [157].
do. of Sir William Godolphin, i. [346].
do. of Sir Francis Godolphin, i. [347].
on the Grenvilles, ii. [3], [4], [7], [9], [13], [17] note.
his account of Sir Hy. Killigrew, ii. [141].
do. of Sir Wm. Killigrew, ii. [154].
do. of Thomas St. Aubyn, ii. [284].
Thomas, his lines on Tom Killigrew's wedding, ii. [167].
Carlyon, Clement, M.D., his description of Henry Martyn as a schoolboy, ii. [224].
Carminow, Elizabeth, wife of Sir John Arundell, i. [77].
Carminows, The, i. [99]-[101], [140] note, [192] note, [195], [344].
Carnbrea Castle, i. [114] and note.
Carnbrea, ii. [310], [312].
Carteret family, ii. [37].
Carveth, i. [114].
Castle, Mrs. Boddam, her Killigrew portraits, ii. [132], [136].
her double descent from the Killigrews, ii. [136].
her Killigrew plate, ii. [136].
Cawse, John, a pupil of Opie, ii. [273] note.
Chamond, i. [102].
Chamonds, the, ii. [281].
Champernon, [ix].
Chantry, his bust of Davy, i. [257].
'Chantries, Cornish,' i. [200] note.
Charles I., his letter of thanks to the County of Cornwall, ii. [38].
is nearly shot at Fowey, ii. [43] note.
his letter of thanks to Sir Bevill Grenville, ii. [49].
Charles II., at Pendennis Castle, i. [92].
takes refuge at Scilly, i. [350].
Cholwel, the Week St. Mary schoolmaster, i. [157].
Clapperton, Captain, ii. [202].
Clapton, Elizabeth, i. [103].
Clarendon, his encomium of the Cornish army, ii. [50].
his account of young Sidney Godolphin, i. [357]-[359].
description of Sir Bevill Grenville, ii. [38], [56].
account of the great Sir Richard Grenville, ii. [13].
quarrel with the second Sir Richard Grenville, 'Baron of Lostwithiel,' ii. [33], [35].
his character of the second Sir Henry Killigrew, ii. [152].
his account of the battle of Lansdowne, ii. [50].
his account of the battle of Stratton, ii. [46].
Clares, Nunnery of, at Truro, ii. [285].
Clarke Hyde, his comparison of Trevithick and Watt, ii. [325].
Clarke, Theophilus, A.R.A., a pupil of Opie, ii. [273] note.
Claverton—Ralph Allen buried there, i. [22].
Clement's, St., near Truro, i. [314].
Clifton, ii. [4].
Clifton, Sir Francis, marries Elizabeth Killigrew, ii. [159].
Clinton family, i. [196].
Clowance, ii. [282], [287].
Coffin, Jaquet, i. [118].
Coke, the Godolphin steward, i. [342].
Colburn, Zerah, on locomotive engineering, ii. [320].
Cole, Thomasin, ii. [13].
Colenso, Bishop, ii. [226] note.
Coleridge, his opinion of Davy's poetic faculty, i. [248], [256], [261] note.
Columb, St. (major), i. [38].
its college, i. [52].
Conon, Mr., master of the Truro Grammar School, i. [293].
Cook, Captain, the circumnavigator, i. [140], [224] note.
Cooke, Sir Anthony, Preceptor of Edward VI., ii. [147].
Cooke, his life of Foote, i. [311] note, [315].
Cooke, Katherine, wife of Sir Henry Killigrew, ii. [147].
her learning, ii. [148].
her Latin verses to Cecil, ii. [148].
her burial-place and epitaph, ii. [149].
Cookworthy, William, i. [161].
Coombe, near Stow, ii. [17].
Corbeil, or Corboyle, ii. [6], [69], [78].
Cornelius, Father, i. [55].
Cornish Worthies, the necessity for an account of them, i. [xi.-xiii].
principles in selection of the Lives, [xiii].
Cornish miners capture the Cleopatra, i. [297].
Cornishmen, members of the Royal Society, i. [288].
members of the Royal Academy of Arts, ii. [245] and note.
noted for their bass voices, ii. [90].
Queen Elizabeth's saying of them, ii. [123].
Wranglers at Cambridge, ii. [226] note.
Cornish forces for King Charles I., ii. [39] note.
song on the Armada, ii. [17] note.
troops at siege of Bristol, ii. [52].
tumults in 1727 owing to scarcity of corn, ii. [290].
Cornwall, Charles I.'s letter of thanks to the county, ii. [38].
the mining districts, i. [109].
mining operations in, ii. [308]-[311].
the old main road through, i. [99].
Corrie, Bishop, the friend of Martyn, ii. [236], and passim.
Corunna, Lord Vivian at, ii. [349].
Coryton, Mr., a Royal Commissioner for Cornwall, ii. [150].
Courtney, W. P., i. (in Introduction).
Courtneys, The, i. [101], [140] note.
Courtenay, Henry, at battle of Braddock Down, ii. [286].
Coverack, ii. [89].
Coxe, Frances Susannah, i. [131] note.
Cranch, Betsy, mother of Lord Vivian, ii. [346], [347] and note.
Crantock, i. [38].
Crediton, Sir Robert Killigrew, Lord of the Manor of, ii. [159].
Croft, Cecilia, wife of Tom Killigrew, ii. [167], [168], [178].
Crowan Church, ii. [282], [285], [286], [300].
Cudlipp, Elizabeth, wife of John Anstis, i. [33].
Cunningham, Allen, his remarks on Opie, ii. [246].
Curgenven, Rev. W., Martyn's brother-in-law, ii. [227].
Cuvier, his opinion of Davy, i. [264], [287].
D
Danet, Elizabeth, i. [104].
Dangrous, William, i. [195].
Daniell, Ralph Allen, i. [25].
Daniell, Thomas, i. [25], [26], [255].
Darrell, Jane, ii. [117] note.
Davies, his opinion of Foote, i. [321], [331], [336].
Davy the composer, ii. [91].
Davy family, i. [247].
DAVY, SIR HUMPHRY, i. [247]-[288].
his birthplace, [247].
his youth, [248].
his poetic faculty, [248], [256], [261] note.
his schooling, [250], [253].
his portraits, [251]-[257].
as a young man, [252], [257], [260] note, [261].
articled to a surgeon, [253].
his fondness for fishing and shooting, [254], [272], [282] note.
begins chemistry, [254].
becomes assistant at the Pneumatic Hospital, Clifton, [255].
his dangerous experiments on nitrous oxide, etc., [256], [266].
his scheme of study, [259].
appointed to the Royal Institution, [259].
the father of agricultural chemistry, [260].
elected F.R.S., [260].
delivers the Bakerian Lectures, i. [261].
ill with typhus fever, [262].
visits Ireland, [262].
is urged to enter the Church, [263].
is knighted, [264].
is married, [264].
visits Scotland, [266].
experiments in electric lighting, [266].
goes on the Continent, [267].
experiments on the torpedo, [267], [284].
examines the extinct French and Italian volcanoes, [268], [271].
becomes acquainted with Volta, [268].
helps to found the Geological Society of Penzance, [268].
one of the founders of the Athenæum Club, [269].
originates the Zoological Society, [269].
returns to England in 1815, [269].
discovers the safety-lamp, [270].
is entertained by the coal-owners at Newcastle, [270].
his will, [270] note, [286].
is made a baronet, [271].
revisits the Continent in 1818, [271].
examines the fresco colouring
at Pompeii, [272].
do. the burnt papyri at Herculaneum, [272].
returns to England in 1820, [272].
visits Scott at Abbotsford, [272]-[275].
his costume, [273], [277].
his conversations with Scott, [275].
is made President of the Royal Society, [277].
his weekly social gatherings, [277].
his illness, [278], [280].
revisits Ireland, Wales and Scotland, [278].
visits Penzance in 1821, [278].
investigates metal sheathing for vessels, [278].
visits Norway, Sweden and Denmark, [279].
specimens of his poetry, [248], [279], [282].
revisits the Continent in 1827, [280].
retires from the Royal Society, i. [281].
Royal Society medal in his honour, [281] note.
his religious views, [281], [282].
returns to London, 1827, [282].
writes the 'Salmonia,' [283].
last visit to the Continent in 1828, [283].
plans 'Consolations of Travel,' [283].
writes 'Last of the O'Donoghues,' [283].
is seriously ill at Rome, [284].
a good linguist, [284] note.
his latest literary enjoyments, [285].
at Geneva on his return homewards, [285].
last hours and death at Geneva, [286].
his death and epitaph, [286].
his principal works and discoveries, [287] note.
on Trevithick's steam locomotive, ii. [319] note.
Davy, Robert, i. [247].
Dr. John, i. [259], [280], [281], [284], [286].
his analysis of Sir Humphry Davy's earlier discoveries, i. [263].
De Crespigny, Eliza, Lord Vivian's first wife, ii. [348], [363].
DE DUNSTANVILLES, their Norman origin, etc., i. [111]-[113] note.
Reginald, Earl of Cornwall, i. [112] note.
Adeliza, wife of Thomas, Baron Basset, i. [112] note.
Alan de (temp. 1100), i. [112].
Alice (temp. Hen. III.), i. [113].
Cecilia (temp. Rich. I.), i. [113].
Lady, at Trevithick's, ii. [319].
Delaines, The, friends of Foote, i. [319].
Delany, Mrs. (Mary Grenville), her account of the Basset family (circa 1730), i. [124].
her description of George Grenville, ii. [83].
do. of Mr. Killigrew, ii. [135].
her portrait by Opie, ii. [260].
Denham, Sir John, his lines on Tom Killigrew, ii. [163].
his epigram on Cowley and Killigrew, ii. [166].
Dentatus, Hamon, ii. [6].
Dibdin, Dr., his remarks on Davy, i. [252].
Dibdin, his relations to Incledon, ii. [98].
'Dineham, John,' i. [157].
Dixon, 'Fasti Eboracensis' of, ii. [9].
Dodd, Rev. Dr., his widow caricatured by Foote, i. [331].
'Dolphin Town (see Godolphin Town).
Doran, Dr., his observations on Foote, i. [331].
Drew, Samuel, i. [255].
Dryden, his tribute to George Grenville's poetry, ii. [85].
his ode on Anne Killigrew, ii. [190].
Duloe, Rectory of, ii. [285].
Dunbar, Major John, marries Ann Killigrew, ii. [132].
Durham, Bishop of, urges Davy to enter the Church, i. [263].
Durham, Lord, his address to Davy, i. [270].
Dutch ships seized by the Killigrews at Falmouth, ii. [114].
E
Ecclesiasticus on our forefathers, [vii].
Echard, his account of Sir Richard Grenville, 'Baron of Lostwithiel,' ii. [35].
his particulars of the Restoration, ii. [66] note.
Edgcumbes, The, of Mount Edgcumbe (see Introduction).
Edgecumbe, Honble. George, Admiral, i. [208] and note.
Edgecombe Lieut.-Colonel in Charles I.'s army, ii. [39] note.
Edwardes, Dr., i. [255].
Edwards, Thos., the architect, i. [116].
Efford or Ebbingford, i. [81]-

[87].
Elder-trees in Cornwall, i. [193].
Elizabeth Castle, Scilly, ii. [119].
Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia, intercedes for Tom Killigrew, ii. [168] note.
Eliot, Sir John, [xiv].
relations with Sir Bevill Grenville, ii. [41].
Emerson, R. W., on Biography, [x].
on 'Steam,' ii. [328] note.
Enys family, i. [114].
J. S., ii. [314].
Erissey family, i. [344], [345].
Juliana, i. [87].
Erissey, Richard, marries Frances Killigrew, ii. [131].
Erissey, Richard, ii. [131] note.
Erme, St., ii. [115].
Erth, St., ii. [119].
Evelyn, John, his friendship with the Godolphins, i. [362].
his life of Margaret Godolphin, i. [365], [370] et seq.
his opinion of the great Sir R. Grenville, ii. [28].
his anecdote of Tom Killigrew, ii. [168].
Ewens, William, ii. [121].
Exeter College, Oxford, ii. [226] note.
Registers of, [xii]., ii. [5].
EXMOUTH, LORD, i. [291]-[308].
his birth and childhood, [292]-[3].
enters the navy, [294].
under Burgoyne in America, [294].
returns to England, [295].
made Post-Captain, [296].
marries, [296].
in the Winchelsea and Salisbury, [297].
turns farmer, [297].
appointed to the Nymphe, [297].
is knighted, [298].
clears the Channel, [299].
cuts down and refits the Indefatigable, [299].
his gallant rescue of the Dutton's crew at Plymouth, [300].
made a Baronet, [300].
his coat of arms, [300].
assists in preventing the French descent upon Ireland, [300].
desires to attack Brest, [301].
quells a mutiny at Bantry Bay, [301].
rests at Trefusis, [302].
made Colonel of Marines, and elected M.P., [302].
blockades the French at Corunna and Ferrol, [302].
helps to save Pitt's administration, [302].
promoted Rear-Admiral of the White, [302].
made Commander-in-Chief, in India, [302].
returns to England, [303].
blockades the Dutch fleet in the Scheldt, [303].
Commander-in-Chief in the Mediterranean, [303].
made Baron Exmouth, [303].
his offspring, [303] note.
goes again to the Mediterranean in 1815, [304].
saves Marseilles, i. [304].
undertakes the siege of Algiers, [304]-[6].
liberates the Christian and other slaves, [306].
his later honours, [307].
is appointed to the naval command at Plymouth, [307].
his last days and death, [308].
his portraits, [308].
F
Fairfax in Cornwall, i. [93], [172].
FALMOUTH family (see Boscawen).
Haven, i. [99], [194], [292].
the town arms, ii. [116].
its rise and progress, ii. [125], [126], [128], [131], [132], [135].
old maps of, ii. [126] note.
origin of St. Charles Church there, ii. [128].
Killigrew monuments in the church, ii. [132].
Faraday, his connexion with Davy, i. [267].
Farningham, i. [146].
Fauntleroy's Bank, i. [164].
Felton, Dr., his opinion of George Grenville as a poet, ii. [84].
Fentongollan, i. [99], [192], [205].
Ferguson, Professor, his opinion of Davy, i. [257].
Fermor, Jane, ii. [124].
Fielding at Ralph Allen's, i. [9].
Fleming, maiden name of Martyn's mother, ii. [224].
Flores, in the Azores, ii. [21] and note.
Flushing, i. [292], [296], [297].
Foote, Edward, i. [313].
Eleanor, i. [313], [314].
Henry, i. [314].
John, the dramatist's grandfather, i. [314].
John, mayor of Truro, [314] note.
FOOTE, SAMUEL, i. [311]-[336].
his claims to notice, [311].
his voluminous works, [311].
Foster's opinion of him, [312].
Baker's opinion of him, [312].
his bon mots, [313], [333].
his parentage and birthplace, [313], [315].
his education, [315].
goes to Worcester College, Oxford, [316].
entered at the Inner Temple, [316].
his vanity and dandyism, i. [317] and note.
quarrels with Garrick, [317] and note, [326].
his portraits, [318].
his three fortunes, [318], [322].
goes on the stage, [319].
his first piece, [320].
caricatures Macklin, [320], [323] and note.
has his license withdrawn, [320].
his 'Tea-drinking,' [321].
his 'Auction of Pictures,' [321].
his satiric powers, [321].
his generosity, [321] note.
his address, [321].
his play 'The Knights,' [322].
his extravagance and dissipation, [322], [328] note, [330].
again takes the Haymarket Theatre, [323].
his piece 'The Author' suppressed by the Lord Chamberlain, [323].
goes to Dublin with Tate Wilkinson, [324].
produces 'The Minor,' [324].
ridicules Whitefield, [325].
his aversion to newspaper critics, [326].
produces 'The Liar,' [327].
do. 'The Orators,' [327].
leases the Edinburgh Theatre, [327].
'The Mayor of Garrat, and succeeding plays, [328].
breaks his leg, [328].
produces 'The Devil on Two Sticks,' [329].
revisits Dublin, [330].
his 'Primitive Puppet Show,' [330].
his 'Cozeners,' and later plays, [321]-[333].
his affair with the Duchess of Kingston, [331].
sells his Patent to Colman, [332].
paralysed whilst acting, [333].
retires to Bath, [333].
goes to Dover, [333].
his last jokes at the Ship Inn, Dover, [333].
last illness and death, [333].
buried at Westminster Abbey, [334].
his epitaph, [334].
his alleged marriages, [334].
his residences, [326], [335].
his talents and his character, i. [335].
Foote, Samuel, the elder, i. [313], [314].
Samuel (another of that name), [311] note.
Fortescue family, i. [196] note; ii. [5].
Fox, the late Caroline, her remark on Mr. Edward Opie, ii. [247].
Charles James, his opinion of Foote, i. [327], [336].
his portrait by Opie, ii. [256].
his opinion of Opie's mental powers, ii. [264].
George Croker, his advice to Lander, ii. [202].
Mr. Howard, on the Lizard Point lights, ii. [124] note.
Froude, Mr., his tribute to Sir Richard Grenville, ii. [27].
Frowde, Susan, i. [296].
Fuller, on William Grenville, Archbishop of York, ii. [9].
Fuller's translation of Lady Katharine Killigrew's lines, ii. [149].
Fuseli, his portrait by Opie, ii. [256].
G
Gall, Master John, i. [155].
Garrick, his relations with Foote, i. [317] note, [326], [336].
Garth, Dr., his tribute to Godolphin's merit, i. [384].
Gatty, Dr. Alfred, his acquaintance with Bligh, i. [145].
Gaverigan, Manor of, ii. [285].
Geneva, Davy dies there, i. [286].
George III., his conversation with Bligh, i. [145].
Ghent, Sir R. Grenville's tomb at, ii. [34] note.
Gilbert, C. S., his 'History of Cornwall,' i. [369]; ii. [56].
Gilbert Davies, i. [26], [251] note, [254], [281]; ii. [37].
his connexion with Trevithick, ii. [314], [319], [327].
Gillyngvase Bay, ii. [126].
Gluvias Church, ii. [117].
Glynn, Major, i. [111].
Glynn, the seat of the Vivians, ii. [345].
Godfrey, Charlotte, i. [197], [210].
Godfrey of Cornwall, [xiv].
GODOLPHINS, THE, i. [340]-[396].
family, [114], [118], [173], [191], [195], [340]-[396]; ii. [3], [39], [119], [283].
Hals' description of the family, i. [340].
description of the place, [340]-[344].
or 'Dolphin Town, Scilly, [350].
Manor of, ii. [285].
origin of the name, i. [344].
their early origin, [345].
intermarriages of the family, [344], [353].
great tin-owners, [342], [347], [348].
obtain lease of Scilly Isles and become Governors, [350]-[353].
number of deaths in the family in a short period, [350].
School, The, at Salisbury, [352].
Captain, killed in a duel, 1682, [353].
Colonel in Charles I.'s army, ii. [39].
Charles, M.P. for Helston, i. [379].
Elizabeth, maid of honour to Katharine of Braganza, [353].
Ellinor, [344].
Sir Francis, friend of Richard Carew, ii. [24].
Francis, Baron Godolphin of Helston, i. [364].
Sir Francis, knighted in 1580, [347].
Carew's account of him, [347], [348] note.
Lipscomb's do., [347].
repulses the Spaniards at Penzance, [348].
marries Margaret Killigrew, [350].
Sir Francis, [361], [368].
his loyalty and poetic skill, [361].
Hobbes dedicates his 'Leviathan' to him, [362].
is M.P. for St. Ives, 1640, [362].
his wife and family, [362].
Francis, second and last Earl, [374], [389].
is made Lord Warden of the Stannaries, [382].
dies, [389].
his love for the turf, [392].
Gentle, three of the name, [347].
Henry, Dean of St. Paul's and Provost of Eton, [362].
educated at Eton and at Oxford, i. [362].
marries his cousin Margaret Godolphin, [362].
his piety and munificence, [363], [364].
his monument at Eton, [363].
was to have been made Bishop of Exeter, [364].
his descendants, [364].
Jael, [197], [210].
John (temp. Hen. III.), [340].
John (temp. Hen. VII.), [345].
John, Captain of Scilly, [351].
marries Judith Amerideth, [351].
John, LL.D., goes to Oxford, [353].
is made Judge of the Admiralty, [354].
his legal and religious books, [355].
his death and burial-place, [356].
his son Francis, died 1695, [356].
Margaret, wife of Sidney Godolphin, [362].
as 'Diana,' [370] note.
comes to the Court, [371].
her pious disposition, [371].
leaves the Court, [373].
lodges in Scotland Yard, [373].
marries Sidney Godolphin, [374].
her illness and death, [374].
her last letter to her husband, [375].
is buried at Breage, [377].
the inscription on her coffin, [377].
Sidney, M.P., killed in a Civil War skirmish, 1643, [357].
Clarendon's account of him, [357].
Sir Egerton Brydges' do., [360].
Hobbes' do., [360].
his poetic skill, [361].
Sidney, 'Prime Minister,' [340], [362], [365]-[396].
is left £5,000 a year by his brother, [362].
his birth and early days, [365].
goes to Spain and Holland, [366].
is made Privy Councillor, and one of the 'Triumvirate,' i. [368].
becomes First Lord of the Treasury, [368].
is made Baron Godolphin of Rialton, [368].
James II. practises upon him, [369].
is made Chamberlain to the Queen, [369].
Second Commissioner to the Treasury, [369].
is selected to propose an 'accommodation' with William III., [369].
finds favour with William III., [370].
yearns to retire to Cornwall, [370].
marries Margaret Blagge, [374].
his letter to Evelyn on his wife's death, [375].
political troubles, [378], [380].
is made one of the nine Justices to manage England, [378].
leaves office for a while, [378].
is made Lord High Treasurer by Anne, [378].
effects the Union with Scotland, [379], [383].
his pseudonyms, [380] note, [381].
his secret correspondence with James II., [381].
his honours increase, [381], [386].
his connexion with Marlborough's Continental wars, [379], [382].
his portraits, [382], [391].
his North American Expedition, [383].
his weariness of office, [383], [386].
his share in the Conformity Bill, [384].
clamour against him, [384].
favours Walpole, [385].
loses favour with Anne, [386].
is dismissed from office, [387].
the shock to the national credit, [388].
his illness, death, and funeral, i. [389].
his appearance, manners, and character, [391]-[6].
Thomas, shot at the siege of Boulogne, [346].
marries first a Grenville, [347].
marries, second time, a Bonython, [347].
Colonel William, brother of young Sidney, [361].
Sir William, Vice Warden of the Stannaries (temp. Hen. VIII.), [342], [346].
Sir William, [351], [356].
his son, ambassador at Madrid, [351].
the friend of Locke, [351].
is suspected of treason, [352].
his will declared void, [352].
Sir William, made a baronet by Charles II., [362].
See also [Errata and Addenda].
Godwin, a friend of Opie, ii. [255].
Goodere, Sir Edward, i. [314].
tragedy, the, concerning, i. [318].
Gordon, Duchess of, i. [260].
Gornard (or Gurney), Sir Richard, ii. [4].
Granville (see Grenville).
Granville, in Normandy, ii. [6].
Graynfylde, John, ii. [4].
Green, Anne, her horrible execution, ii. [129].
Green, J. R., his account of the support of the Royal cause by the Cornish, ii. [57] note.
Grenfell, Miss, her relations with Martyn, ii. [232] and passim.
Grenfield, Henry, Master of Truro Grammar School, ii. [37].
Grenfield, Richard (temp. 1316), ii. [5].
GRENVILLE FAMILY, i. [87], [114], [191], [340], [345]; ii. [3]-[85], [281]-[283].
a true Norman-Cornish family, ii. [3]-[5], [6].
their portraits, [82] note.
their coat of arms, [5] note, [6] note.
various modes of spelling the name, [6].
indigence of the later Grenvilles, [36], [37].
their various seats in Cornwall, [4] note, [6] note.
Rectors of Kilkhampton, [5].
frequent occurrence of Richard as their Christian name, ii. [6].
Sir Bartholomew, [5].
Sir Bernard, M.P., son of the great Sir Richard, [30].
Sir Bevill, [4], [30].
his birthplace and parentage, [30], [58] note.
his 'Gate Song of Stow,' by Rev. R. S. Hawker, [32].
goes to Exeter College, Oxford, [33].
enters Parliament, [33].
is knighted, [33].
M.P. for Cornwall and for Launceston, [38] note.
heads the Cornish gentry in the King's cause, [38].
suppresses the Parliamentary Committees in Cornwall, [38].
his letter to Sir John Trelawny, [39].
his letters to his wife, [41], [43].
his friendship for Sir John Eliot, [41].
at battle of Braddock Down, [43].
at battle of Stratton, [45].
receives letter of thanks from Charles I., [49].
at the battle of Lansdowne, [50].
is slain, [52], [57] note.
is buried at Kilkhampton, [52] note.
Clarendon's description of him, [56].
his monument at Lansdowne, [57].
do. at Kilkhampton, [58].
his portraits, [63].

his grandson of the same name, [64] note.
Chamond, [5].
Dennis, D.D., [5], [68]-[80].
his birth and education, [69].
Kilkhampton his first preferment, [69].
made Dean of Durham, [69].
goes into exile with James II., [69]-[76].
his loyalty to the Crown, [70], [75].
his invalid wife, [70], [77].
endeavours to reform the clergy, ii. [70].
his incompetence to manage his money affairs, [71].
his admirable household rules, [72]-[74].
is imprisoned in his own deanery, [76].
resides at Rouen and prints his works, [77].
is deprived of his deanery, and his library and goods distrained by the Sheriff, [77].
is slighted by James II., [77] and note.
retires to Corbeil, [78].
his latter days, [78].
his death at Paris, [79].
his portrait, [79].
his character, [79], [80].
George, Baron Lansdowne, [81].
declares himself a Cornishman, [81].
goes to Cambridge, [81].
is about James II.'s Court, [81].
his admiration of Mary of Modena, [81].
his poems and plays, [81].
his representation of Cornwall in Parliament, [81].
made Privy Councillor, and Treasurer of the Household to Queen Anne, [81].
committed to the Tower, [81].
goes abroad to retrench his expenses, [82].
dies, [82].
strange story about his remains, [82].
his portrait, [82].
his character as a man and a poet, [83]-[85].
John (temp. Edward IV.), [5].
John, rector of Kilkhampton, [5].
John, son of the great Sir Richard, [30].
John, Earl of Bath, [34].
at battle of Lansdowne, [54].
at Oxford, [65].
wounded at battle of Newbury, [65].
is made Governor of Scilly, [65].
John, Earl of Bath, is instrumental in Restoration of Charles II., ii. [66].
communicates to Parliament Charles II.'s proposals from Breda, [67].
is made a Secretary of State, Earl of Bath, etc., [67].
builds the new house of Stow, [67].
his wife and offspring, [68].
declares for William III., [68], [75].
Lady Grace, her extraction and marriage, [41] note.
her portraits, [41] note.
alleged letters by her, [59]-[63].
Mary (see Mrs. Delany).
Mary, wife of Thomas St. Aubyn, [283].
Richard (temp. William I.), [7], [9].
Richard (temp. Henry III.), [6] note.
Sir Richard (temp. Henry VIII.), [9].
loses Trematon Castle, [10].
imprisoned at Launceston, [10].
specimens of his poetical powers, [11], [12].
the great Sir Richard, [4] note, [13]-[29].
his birth and parentage,13.
his biographers, [13].
his military career in Eastern Europe, [13].
as Sheriff of Cornwall arrests Francis Tregian, [14].
is knighted, [14].
twice visits Virginia, [14].
during the time of the Armada, [14].
his appearance and portraits, [15].
his wife, Mary St. Leger, [20].
as Vice-Admiral is sent to intercept the Spanish West Indian fleet, [20].
his last fight at Flores, and last words, [28].
Sir Richard, 'Baron of Lostwithiel,' [33].
Clarendon's quarrel with him, [33].
Earl of Suffolk's quarrel with him, ii. [33], [35].
is fined and imprisoned in the Fleet, [33].
joins the Parliamentarian forces, [33].
deserts them, [33].
joins the King's army, [34].
blockades Plymouth, [34].
surrenders to Hopton his
command in the West, [34].
is imprisoned at Launceston, [34].
fortifies Launceston, [34] note.
do. Hall House, Fowey, [64].
his opposition to the King's general, [34] and note.
captures Restormel Castle, Lostwithiel, [64].
Clarendon's account of him, [35].
Echard's do., [35].
George, Lord Lansdowne's do., [35], [81].
prints his own defence, [35].
seizes, at Bruges, some of Lord Suffolk's property—but restores it, [35].
goes into exile, [36].
is forbidden the English Court, [36].
dies broken-hearted, [36].
his project for defending Cornwall by joining the English and Bristol Channels, [36] note.
his tomb at Ghent, [34] note.
his son Richard's fate, [36].
Roger, drowned at Spithead, [13].
Sir Theobald, [4], [7], [8].
William, Chancellor of England and Archbishop of York, [7].
his death and tomb, [8].
his ring, [9].
see also [77] note, and [78] and note.
See also [Errata and Addenda.]
Grotius on Archbishop Grenville's ring, ii. [9].
Guiccioli, Countess, her acquaintance with Davy, i. [281].
Gunpowder first used for blasting rocks in Cornwall, i. [348] note.
Gwavas, Mr., i. [176].
H
Hailstone, Professor, i. [255].
Hall walk, Fowey, ii. [43] note, [64].
Hals, the Historian, i. [102] and passim.
Lieutenant-Colonel James, at battle of Braddock Down, ii. [286].
Sir Nicholas, of Pengerswick, ii. [124].
Harley, i. [380].
Harris, Christopher, i. [173].
Lydia, i. [172].
Harmony Cot, ii. [245] and note.
Harvey, Henry, ii. [326], [328].
Jane, wife of Richard Trevithick, ii. [312].
John, [311] and note.
Hawke, Admiral, of Cornish extraction, i. [209] note.
Hawker, William, [301].
Rev. R. S., i. [154].
his account of Stow, and the Grenvilles, ii. [31].
his alleged discovery of Grenville's letters at Stow, ii. [59].
Hawkins, Admiral, ii. [28].
Hellins, Dr. John, i. [255].
Henrietta Maria, Queen, at Pendennis Castle, i. [92].
Henry, Dr., his opinion of Davy's genius, i. [249].
Henwood, W. J., i. [342].
Herry, Johanna, ii. [117] note.
Hervey, Admiral Lord, a patron of Incledon, ii. [94].
Hewlett, Mr. H. G., his translation of Katharine Killigrew's Latin verses to Cecil, ii. [149].
his letter about Admiral Bligh's ghost, i. [146].
Hill, Mary, wife of Sir William Killigrew, ii. [159].
Hingeston-Randolph, the Rev. F. C., his valuable assistance to the author, [xvi].
Hitchins, Rev. Malachi, i. [255]; ii. [233] note.
Hitchins, Rev. T. M., ii. [233].
Hobbes, his account of young Sidney Godolphin, i. [360].
Hobby, Thomas, ii. [148].
Hoblyn family, i. [345].
Hogg, Thomas, his poem on St. Michael's Mount, ii. [301] note.
Holcroft, his account of Opie, ii. [261].
Hone, Horace, i. [162].
Hornblower, Jonathan, ii. [314].
Howard, Admiral Lord Thomas, ii. [21] note.
Leonard, his Collection of Letters, ii. [140].
Howlett, Mr. Richard, his 'Monumenta Franciscana,' i. [72], [89].
Hurd, Bishop, at Ralph Allen's, i. [13].
Hussey family, ii. [345], [348] and note.
I
Incledon, Charles, ii. [111].
INCLEDON, BENJAMIN CHARLES, i. [322]; ii. [89]-[111].
his kindness to his mother, [90].
the great range of his voice, [91]-[100].
is choir-boy in Exeter Cathedral, [91].
is an excellent swimmer, [91].
charms Judge Nares by his singing, [92].
runs away from Exeter and joins the navy, [92].
sees active service, [93].
becomes a general favourite, [93].
his portrait, singing 'The Storm,' [93] note.
is introduced to Sheridan and to Colman, [94].
is considered not fitted for the stage, [94].
joins Collins' company at Southampton, [94].
goes with them to Winchester and Bath, [94].
his first appearance at Bath, [94], [95].
his vocal merits recognised by Rauzzini, [95].
is engaged at Vauxhall Gardens, [95].
his singing of 'The Lass of Richmond Hill,' [96].
makes his début at Covent Garden, [96].
his jolly disposition, [96].
is made a butt of, [96].
and retaliates, [97].
cuts a ridiculous appearance as a volunteer, [97].
his large salary, [96]-[104].
his fondness for the 'Beggar's Opera,' [98].
his relation to Braham, [98].
do. to Dibdin, [98].
his success at Bury St. Edmunds, ii. [98].
his attachment to his profession, [99].
his voice and style, [99].
no actor, [100].
with Mathews, at Leicester, [100].
his joke with a Quaker there, [100].
sings in oratorio, [101].
his singing of 'All's Well' with Braham, [101].
his singing at the Glee Club, [101].
retires from Covent Garden, [101].
his entertainments in the provinces, [102].
his coach journey with H. C. Robinson, [102].
his singing to Mrs. Siddons, [102].
sings 'The Storm' at a dinner given to John Kemble, [103].
his favourite songs, [103], [104],
his last benefit at Drury Lane, [104].
his last appearance and farewell speech at Southampton, [104].
his wives, [105]-[109].
as a composer, [105].
is shipwrecked in Dublin Bay, [106].
goes to America, [106].
has an attack of paralysis at Brighton, [107].
sings for the last time at Worcester, and dies there, [107].
his fondness for the kitchen, [107] note.
do. for quack medicines, [107] note.
his dissipated habits, [108].
his ingenious patching up of a quarrel with a military officer, [109].
his grand dinner at Brompton Crescent, [109].
his extravagance and carelessness, [110].
dies in easy circumstances, [111].
is buried at Hampstead, [111].
his sons and daughter, [111].
Incledon, Frank, [111].
Loveday, [89], [90].
Michael, [90].
Ilcombe, ii. [6] note.
J
Jackson, of Exeter, the composer, ii. [91].
Jago, Mary, adopted by Mrs. Killigrew, ii. [136].
marries Daniel Wait, ii. [136].
William, of Wendron, i. [102].
James, Mary, an old sweetheart of Opie, ii. [264].
Jeffery, Mr. H. Martyn, edits some of Martyn's letters, ii. [233].
Jeffrey, his opinion of Mrs. Opie's novels, ii. [259].
Jenkins, Sir Lionel, i. [368].
Jermyn, Lord Harry, ii. [150].
his letter to Sir Henry Killigrew, at Pendennis, ii. [151].
Jewell, William, the friend of Foote, i. [334].
Job, on our ancestors, [vii].
Johannes, Sarisburiensis, his tribute to Cornish valour, ii. [48].
Johnson's, Dr., opinion of Borlase's 'Scilly Islands,' i. [182].
opinion of Foote, i. [311], [327], [336].
opinion of George Grenville as a poet, ii. [84].
his portrait by Opie, ii. [253].
K
Kea parish, i. [194].
Kempthorne, Senior Wrangler of 1796, ii. [226].
Keverne, St., ii. [89].
Kilkhampton, ii. [4], [5], [69].
Killigarth, ii. [30].
KILLIGREWS, THE, [xv]., i. [191], [344]; ii. [115]-[195], [283].
etymology of the name, ii. [115].
at siege of Pendennis Castle, i. [92].
their family monument at Falmouth, ii. [115].
of royal descent, [116].
their swannery at Falmouth, [115] note.
the Devonshire branch, [116] note.
their earlier Christian names, [116].
they move to Arwenack, [117].
trusted courtiers, [117].
a very numerous family, [118].
they seem naturally to divide into two branches, [118].
their 'family tree,' ii. [118].
the elder branch, [119]-[137].
the junior do., [137]-[195].
addicted to 'piracy,' [121].
difficulty in identifying the early members, [121].
amongst the predecessors of the heroes of the Armada conflict, [122].
their promotion of the interests of Falmouth, [126].
Falmouth, their later burial-place, [128], [132].
some of the family portraits, [136].
in St. Erme, [115], [116].
Ann (Mrs. Kirk), drowned at London Bridge, [156].
Ann, marries Martin Lister, [131].
Anne, [188]-[195].
her birth and baptism, [189].
early displays her talents, [189].
Dryden's ode on her, [189]-[192].
Anthony Wood's opinion of her, [189].
her skill in painting, [189], [191], [192].
her portraits, [189], [193].
Maid of Honour to the Duchess of York, [193].
her poems, [193], [194].
her death, [193] and note.
her burial-place, [189] note.
her epitaph, [188], [194], [195].
Charles, Master of the Revels, [177].
succeeds to the Drury Lane playhouse, [177].
introduces useful reforms in theatres, [178].
Elizabeth, [119].
Elizabeth, marries Count de Kinski, [129].
Elizabeth, wife of Dr. Lambe, Dean of Ely, [184].
Elizabeth, Viscountess Shannon, [156].
Fitz-Hardinge, Lady, [156].
marries a Godolphin, [156].
Yarmouth, Countess of, [156].
Frances, marries Richard Erissey, [131].
Frances Maria, last of the name, [136], [165], [174].
George Augustus, [136].
George, killed by Walter Vincent, ii. [131].
his wife and daughter, [132].
Harry, son of Tom, 'the jester,' [178].
his bad character, [178].
his quarrel with the Duke of Buckingham, [179].
his wife, Lady Mary Savage, [179].
his sons, [179].
his death, [179].
Henry (temp. 1402), [116].
Henry (15th century), [116].
Admiral Henry, [184].
is made Lord of the Admiralty by William III., [184].
his death, and MS. letters, [184].
his action with the French off Beachy Head, [185].
his character, [187].
his wife, and son Henry, [187].
Dryden's allusion to him, [191].
Sir Henry, the Ambassador, [137].
his parentage, [137].
his political appointments, [137].
his letters to Burleigh on Scotch affairs, [137] note.
his verses to Lady Cecil, [137].
his description of John Knox, [137].
sent by Elizabeth to a Congress at Frankfort, [138].
his many diplomatic missions, [140] and note, [148].
complains of being ill-remunerated, [140].
his latter days, [141].
his mission to Mary Queen of Scots, [141].
his pay whilst in France, [142].
at siege of St. Quentin, [142].
one of a 'forlorn hope' at Rouen, [142] note.
lived in Broad Street Ward, [143].
dies there, [143].
his character and accomplishments, [143]-[147].
his wives and children, ii. [147], [149].
Sir Henry, son of the ambassador, [149]-[150].
his adherence to Charles I., [150] and note.
is a Royal Commissioner for Cornwall, [150].
is one of the defenders of Pendennis Castle, [150].
is wounded there, [152].
dies at St. Malo, [152].
his character, and that of his son, by Clarendon, [152], [153].
his burial, and funeral sermon, [153].
his wife and son Henry, [153].
Sir Henry, of Crediton, [159].
Major Henry, [177].
Henry, Master of the Savoy, [180].
his education, [180].
takes his degrees of M.A. and D.D. at Oxford, [180].
specimen of his Latin verse, [180].
is Preceptor to James II., etc., [180].
made Master of the Savoy, [181].
his tragedy, 'The Conspiracy,' [181].
a song by him from that play, [181].
his play, 'The Tyrant King of Crete,' [182].
his sermons printed, [182].
extract from one of them, [182].
his character as Master of the Savoy, [182].
his wives, [183].
his daughter Anne, [184].
Captain James, [188].
killed in an engagement off Leghorn, in 1694, [188].
his bravery, [188].
Jane, [150].
Dame Jane, [120] note.
John (temp. 1297), [116].
John (temp. Henry VIII.),
first Captain of Pendennis Castle, [119].
his brass at Budock Church, [119].
surveys and fortifies the Scilly Isles, [119].
is Sheriff of Cornwall, ii. [119].
builds Arwenack, [119].
his three brothers, [137].
his sons, [137].
Sir John, second captain of Pendennis, [120].

John (third of the name), [120].
complaints of his 'ill demeners,' [120].
his wife and children, [122].
Sir John (fourth and last of that name), [123], [126].
is knighted (1617), [123].
promotes the lighting of Lizard Point, [124].
Lady Katharine (see Katharine Cooke).
Margaret, i. [350].
Mary, wife of Sir John James, ii. [156].
Mary, succeeds to most of the family property, [132].
marries Colonel John West, [132].
her daughters take the name of Killigrew, [132] note.
Maugan, [116].
a Mr., in Dublin; Mrs. Delany's account of him, [135].
a Peter (date uncertain), [121].
Sir Peter, 'Peter the Post,' [126].
his services to Charles I., [127].
Sir Peter, the second, [128].
his poverty, [128].
is M.P., and marries Mary, sister of Lord Lucas of Colchester, [128].
his children, [129].
Sir Peter, second baronet, [129].
educated at Oxford and in France, [129].
his verses on the execution of Anne Green, [130].
do. 'Pro Rege Soteria,' [130]
is made Governor of Pendennis, [130].
marries Frances Twysden, [130].
his offspring, [131].
his disappointments and retirement to Ludlow, [131].
his portrait, [131].
his death, [132].
takes the Penryn Collector of Custom's money to repair Pendennis Castle, ii. [132] note.
Ralph, [116].
Radulphus, [116].
Richard (or Michael—temp. 1350), [116].
Sir Robert, of Hanworth, [154].
is Chamberlain to two Queens of England, [154].
is made Governor of Pendennis Castle, [154].
Ambassador to the United Provinces, [155].
his connexion with the Lindsey Level, [155].
is 'sequestered' for a scuffle in Parliament, [155].
is mixed up with Sir Thomas Overbury's affair, [155].
visits Sir Walter Raleigh in the Tower of London, [155].
gives Whitelock a seat for Helston, [155].
his fine seat at Hanworth, [155].
his wife, Mary Wodehouse, [155].
his death, [156].
his offspring, [156].
Robert, son of Sir Robert, [156].
one of his college exercises, [157].
Sir Robert, Vice-Chamberlain to Queen Anne of Denmark, [159].
his daughters, Elizabeth and Mary, [159].
General Robert, [174].
his monument in Westminster Abbey, [174].
is killed at the battle of Almanza, [174].
his effects, [176].
his last letter, [177].
his heroism, [177].
Simon (temp. Richard 11.), [117].
Simon (temp. Elizabeth), [122], [123].
Thomas (temp. 15th century), [116] note, [117].
his brass at Gluvias, [118].
Thomas (temp. Elizabeth), [122], [123].
Thomas, 'The Jester,' ii. [160].
his birth, [160].
his early Court appointments, [160].
his mode of obtaining fees, [160].
his intimacy with Charles II., [160].
reproves the king, [161], [166], [167].
his bet with Lord Lauderdale, [161].
his mission to Venice, [162].
his plays, [163], [170].
their indelicacy, [163].
King Charles II.'s copy, [165].
his portraits, [165].
his early fondness for play-acting, [165].
his first wife, Cecilia Croft, [167], [168].
their stormy wedded life, [167].
intercepts Hyde's Canary wine, [168].
obtains a license for a playhouse, [169].
starts operas, [170].
his second wife, Charlotte van Hess, [171].
his children by her, [171].
narrowly escapes assassination, [171].
his quarrel with the Earl of Rochester, [171] note.
his death, and burial in Westminster Abbey, [172].
his character, [172].
his will, [172].
his indigence, [172].
his letter to Mrs. Frecheville, [173].
his children, [173].
Tom, the younger, [173].
a courtier and a playwright, [173].
Thomas Guildford, [136].
marries Catherine Chubb, [136].
supports the Stuart cause, [136].
settles at Bristol, and dies
there without issue, [136].
his portrait, [136].
William (temp. Elizabeth), [25].
William, Sir, Charles I.'s letter to him, i. [96].
Sir William, Bart., ii. [123], [126].
Sir William, 'Farmer' of the seals of Queen's Bench and Common Pleas, [153], [154].
is at the Court of James I., [153].
his wife, [153].
his death, [154].
his portrait, [154].
Richard Carew's account of him, [154].
his celebrated offspring, [154].
General William, in the Danish service, [129].
goes over to the Dutch, [129].
recalled to England at the Restoration, [129].
Sir William, baronet (son of Sir Robert), [157].
Gentleman Commoner of Oxford, [157].
his verses set to music by Henry Lawes, [157].
writes plays, [157], [158].
takes degree of D.C.L., [157].
his Court appointments, [157].
commands the King's body-guard, [157].
is made a Baronet, [157].
serves at York and at Edgehill, [157].
is made Governor of Pendennis Castle, [157].
his books, [157].
specimen of his poetry, [158].
is buried at the Savoy, [159].
his wife and children, [159].
Kimberley, Earl of, ii. [118], [156] note.
Kimiel, Manor of, ii. [285].
Kinski, Count de, marries Elizabeth Killigrew, ii. [129].
Kingsley, Charles, his view of Martyn, ii. [223].
Kingsley, Canon, his description of Sir Richard Grenville, ii. [5], [13], [15].
do. of Stow, [17]-[20].
Kingston, Sir Anthony, i. [70].
Kingston, Duchess of, her affair with Foote, i. [331].
Knava, John, takes name of Godolphin, i. [345].
Knott, the Cornish, i. [154] and note.
Knovill, Eleanor, ii. [282].
Knox, John, described by Sir Henry Killigrew, ii. [137].
do. by James Melville, ii. [138].
Kymyell, Elizabeth, ii. [282].
L
Lake's Parochial History of Cornwall, ii. [5].
Lambe, Dr., Dean of Ely, ii. [184].
Lambesso, i. [314].
Lambourne, Annora or Eleanora, i. [50], [101].
Lander, John, ii. [200], [203].
LANDER, RICHARD, buried in the Savoy, ii. [194] note, [199]-[218].
portrait of the Brothers Lander, [199] note, [203].
his monument at Truro, [199], [201], [213].
his birth and parentage, [201].
his lineage, [201].
his grandfather a noted wrestler, [202].
his school-days at Truro, [202].
becomes a gentleman's servant and visits the Continent, [202].
goes to the Cape of Good Hope, [202].
his short stature, [202].
offers to accompany Captain Clapperton to Africa, [202].
his first expedition, [203].
publishes his travels, [203].
his second expedition, [203]-[204].
discovers the course of the Niger, [204].
Murray purchases his papers and publishes his journals, [205].
receives the first premium of the Royal Geographical Society, [205].
his third and last expedition, [206].
attacked by the natives near Ingiamma, [207].
escapes by flight, [209].
is killed by a musket-ball, [211].
is buried at Fernando Po, [211].
Laird and Oldfield's account of his last expedition, [211].
Commander Allen's views and maps of Lander's discoveries on the Niger, [212].
the Royal Geographical Society's recognition of his discoveries, ii. [212].
his monument and stained glass window in the Savoy, [212].
contemporary accounts of his appearance and character, [213], [214].
his widow receives a Government pension, [214].
his last letter, [214].
Land's End, Davy's lines on the, i. [248].
Lane, the artist, i. [135] note.
Langford family, i. [292].
Langherne, John, at Plymouth, ii. [56].
Lanherne, i. [38], [42], [45], [73], [75].
Lanow, ii. [4].
Lansdowne, battle of, ii. [50].
George, Lord, his vindication of Sir Richard Grenville, 'Baron of Lostwithiel,' ii. [35].
erects a monument to Sir Bevill Grenville, ii. [57].
Lanyons, The, ii. [281].
Lawes, Henry, sets William Killigrew's verses to music, ii. [157].
Leeds, Duke of, i. [390].
Leland, on the origin of the St. Aubyns, ii. [287].
Lemon, Harriet, i. [132].
Lerchdekne, Margery, i. [101].
Leslie, C. R., his remarks on Incledon's singing, ii. [107].
Leveson-Gower family, ii. [37].
Lipscombe's account of the origin of the Godolphins, i. [345].
do. of Sir Francis Godolphin, i. [347].
Lister, Martin, his connection with the Killigrews, ii. [131].
his amusing letter to the Steward at Arwenack, ii. [133].
his squabbles with the Falmouth Corporation, [135].
his death, [135].
his MS. history of the Killigrews, [135] note.
Lizard Point, The lighting of, ii. [124].
Lloyd, David, his 'State Worthies,' ii. [143].
Locke, John, a correspondent of Dean Grenville, ii. [78].
John, the friend of Sir William Godolphin, i. [351].
Louisbourg, its siege and capture by Boscawen, i. [223] et seq.
Lower family, i. [195].
Ludgvan, i. [169], [180], [247].
Lundy Island, once belonging to the Grenvilles, ii. [31].
Lysons, Rev. Samuel, i. [111].
borrows Borlase's MS. from Sir John St. Aubyn, ii. [285].
Lyte, Maxwell, his account of Eton College, i. [363].
Lyttelton, Dr. Charles, Bishop of Carlisle, P. S. A., i. [180].
M
Macaulay, Lord, his sketch of England after the defeat of Charles I.'s cause, ii. [64].
his epitaph on Martyn, ii. [241].
Machado, Roger, his journals, ii. [117] note.
Mackintosh, Sir James, his opinion of Opie's mental powers, ii. [264].
Macklin ridiculed by Foote, i. [320], [323].
Maclean, Sir John, his 'Deanery of Trigg Minor,' i. [354] note.
Man-engine, The steam, i. [129].
Markham, Gervase, his 'Most Honourable Tragedie of Sir Richard Grenville, Knight,' ii. [29] note.
Marlborough, Duke of, his relations to Godolphin, i. [379], [385], [387].
Duchess of, i. [378], [385], [393].
Martineau, Harriet, her description of Mrs. Opie, ii. [262].
MARTYN, REV. HENRY, ii. [221]-[241].
his mournful journals and letters, [221].
his religious views, [221].
his biographer, Rev. John Sargent, jun., [222].
his despondency, [223], [225] note.
his birth and parentage, [223].
his father, John Martyn, [224], [226].
his school-days, [224].
his personal appearance, [225] note.
his portrait, [225].
his amiable disposition, [225].
fails to obtain an Oxford scholarship, [226].
goes to Cambridge, [226].
becomes acquainted with the Rev. Charles Simeon, [226].
his religious views on his father's death, ii. [226].
becomes Senior Wrangler, [226].
is Fellow and Tutor of St. John's College, [227].
gains the first prize for Latin prose, [227].
rests at Woodbury on the Fal, [227].
desires to become a missionary, [227].
is ordained, and becomes Mr. Simeon's curate, [228].
loses his patrimony, [228].
seeks a chaplaincy in the East India Company's service, [228].
makes the acquaintance of H. Kirke White, [228].
preaches at Kenwyn, [229].
his daily routine, [229].
his reading, [230].
his religious position and views, [230], [231].
takes his degree of B.D., [232].
preaches in London, [232].
makes the acquaintance of Wilberforce, [232].
obtains his chaplaincy, [232].
his affection for Miss Grenfell, [232], and passim.
sails for India, [233].
long and stormy voyage, [233].
lands with the troops at Cape of Good Hope in January, 1806, [234].
his religious ministrations unappreciated on board ship, [234].
falls ill at Calcutta, [235].
reaches Dinapore, [235].
his two native assistants in translating, [235] and passim.
his translation of the Scriptures, [236], [239], and note.
his health fails, [236].
moves to Cawnpore, [237].
his daily routine in India, [237].
visits Persia, [238].
renewed illness, [239].
sets out for England, [240].
dies near Tokat, [240].
his burial, [241].
his epitaph by Lord Macaulay, [241].
a mission-hall at Cambridge, and a baptistry in Truro
Cathedral erected to his memory, ii. [241].
his motto, [241].
Thomas, author of the map of Cornwall, [224].
Marrais (or Orchard Marries), ii. [116].
Marrys family, i. [114].
Mary of Modena, George Grenville's admiration for her, ii. [81].
Mary Rose, The, sinking of, ii. [13].
Mary, Queen, requests Sir John Arundell to entertain the Prince of Spain, i. [85].
Mary Queen of Scots, Sir Henry Killigrew's mission to her, ii. [141].
Maskelyne, Dr., i. [255].
Masson's account of the negotiations for the Restoration, ii. [66] note.
Master of the Revels, account of the Post, ii. [177] note.
Mathews, his relation to Incledon, ii. [100], [111].
Mawes, St., ii. [125], [126] note.
Mawgan Church, Arundell brasses in, i. [74].
Mayne, Cuthbert, his tragic story, i. [59].
Mayow of Clevyan, i. [70].
Menadarva, i. [103].
Menalida, ancient name of Tehidy, i. [113].
Michael Cornubiensis, his tribute to Cornish valour, ii. [48].
Michael's Mount, St., i. [62], [64], [80], [118], [122]; ii. [285] note, [290] and note, [301] note.
Michael, Penkivel St., i. [192], [209].
Michell (Medeshole), an ancient borough, i. [91].
Michell, John, Dean of Crantock, i. [44].
Michell, of Truro, a circumnavigator, i. [26], [139].
Milles, Dean, P. S. A., his copy of Anstis's 'Register of the Order of the Garter,' [xiv]., i. [30].
short notice of him, i. [31] note, [180].
Militon, Job, sheriff of Cornwall, i. [65], [72].
Millett, Grace, i. [247].
Milton, John, his letter concerning Sir Richard Grenville's seizure of Lord Suffolk's property, ii. [35].
Mohun, [ix].
Molesworths, The, [xiv], i. [345], [354]; ii. [283].
Monk, Duke of Albemarle, ii. [41], [66], [122].
Montpesson, Rachel, i. [105].
Moore, Edward, his lines on Stow, ii. [17] note.
Moore, Sir John, his recognition of Lord Vivian's merits, ii. [349].
Morice, Catherine, of Werrington, wife of Sir John St. Aubyn, third baronet, ii. [294] and note.
Morice, Mr., Warden of the Stannaries, i. [133].
Morris, a cooper, friend of H. Bone, R.A., i. [162].
Morwenstow, ii. [4].
Mulgrave, Lord, a patron of Incledon, ii. [94].
Munday family, i. [368].
Murchison, Sir Roderick, Davy's advice to him, i. [262].
Murdock, inventor of the gas-light, ii. [316], [317].
Murphy, his intended life of Foote, i. [311].
N
Nares, Judge, his delight at Incledon's singing, ii. [92].
Neath Abbey, ii. [7].
Nelson, Lord, his personal thanks to Admiral Bligh, i. [143].
Newcastle, Duchess of, i. [390].
Newlyn East, the church of the Arundells of Trerice, i. [100].
New South Wales, Admiral Bligh appointed as Governor, i. [144].
Niger, The, ii. [201] and note, [204], [205].
Nore, Mutiny at the, i. [143].
Northcote's jealousy of Opie, and admiration for him, ii. [256], [277].
Noy, Sir William, [xiv].
Nunnery at Lanherne, i. [75].
O
Oates, Mark, excites the rivalry of Opie, ii. [246].
O'Connell, Lady, née Miss Bligh, i. [146].
Odo de Tregarrick, [xiv].
Oliver, Dr. William, i. [169], [178].
Opie, Betty, ii. [263] and note.
her letter from her brother, ii. [263].
Opie, Edward, the present artist, [247], [253], [278].
OPIE, JOHN, R.A., i. [135] note, [191]; ii. [245]-[278].
Sir Joshua Reynolds's saying concerning him, [245].
his birth, [245].

his parentage and lineage, [246], [247].
the surroundings of his birthplace, [246].
his style and originality, [246].
his early genius as a painter, [248]-[250], [277].
do. as a mathematician, [250], [251].
his frugal rearing, [249].
is helped by Dr. Wolcot, [250] and passim.
do. by the families of Daniell and Vivian, and by Viscount Bateman, [251].
goes to London, [252].
exhibits at the Royal Academy, [252].
his London residences, [252], [255], [262].
catalogue of his works, by J. Jope Rogers, [251], [252] note.
his reading, [252], [253], [263].
paints Dr. Johnson's portrait, [253].
his rapid success and great popularity, [253].
is introduced to George III., [253].
his letter to his mother, 11th March, 1782, [253].
his first marriage, [255], [278] note.
his divorce, [255].
his bon mot thereupon, [255].
his popularity wanes, [256].
turns to historical compositions, [256].
rumours of his being about to be knighted, [256] note.
is ill from too close application, [256] note.
his historical paintings, [256] and passim.
excites Northcote's jealousy, [256].
elected Associate of the Royal Academy, [257].
his 'Schoolmistress' sold for £787 10s., [258].
is elected Royal Academician, [258].
marries his second wife, [258].
his female portraits, [260], [261].
his memoir by his wife, [261].
visits Belgium, Holland and Paris, ii. [261], [262].
resides at Berners Street, [262].
his connexion with Alderman Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery, [262].
his letter to his sister Betty, 20th Nov., 1800, [263].
his literary talents, [264].
his life of Sir Joshua Reynolds, [265].
his project for a 'Gallery of Naval Pictures,' [265].
his Royal Academy lectures, [266]-[272].
his project for a 'Gallery of Honour,' [267].
do. for a colossal statue of Britannia, [267].
do. for decorating St. Paul's Cathedral, [267].
his health gives way, [272].
his last hours, [273].
his death, [272], [273].
is buried at St. Paul's, [273].
the nature of his illness, [273] note.
his pupils, [273] and note.
his private character, [274]-[277].
his personal appearance, [275].
portraits of him, [275].
the critics on his paintings, [276], [277].
his best works in Cornwall, [278].
Opie, Mrs., the first, ii. [245] note.
the second, [245] note, [258].
her novels, [259].
her poetry, [259], [275] note.
her death, [260].
her life by Miss Brightwell, [260].
her portraits, [260].
her influence on Opie, [260].
her memoir of her husband, [261].
her talent in sketching portraits, [262].
her character and biographers, [262].
Oppy, a Cornish artist, ii. [247].
Orford, Lord, his opinion of George Grenville as a poet, ii. [84].
Osler, Edward, F.L.S., i. [291], [304].
P
Paine, Anthony, of Stow, the Cornish giant, ii. [54], [55].
made Halberdier of the guns at Plymouth, ii. [56].
his portrait, [56].
Palæologus, Dorothy, i. [106].
Paris, Dr., his 'Life of Davy,' i. [252], [287].
Parkes, his relations to Incledon, ii. [96], [100], [107].
Paulton, Elizabeth, i. [101].
Payne, John, Mayor of St. Ives, i. [64], [71].
Pearson, Mrs., Martyn's youngest sister, ii. [228].
Peigne, Jael de, ii. [149].
Pellews, The, i. [292].
Pellew (see Lord Exmouth).
Pellew, Captain Fleetwood, i. [303].
Pellew, Admiral Sir Israel, i. [297], [304].
Pellew, Samuel, i. [292].
Pencalenick, i. [314].
Pendarves family, i. [110], [123], [124], [345]; ii. [283], [285].
Pendarves, Alexander, M.P., ii. [194] note.
Pendeen, i. [171], [172], [174] and note.
Pendennis Castle, i. [91], [94], [95], [307].
in connexion with the Killigrews, ii. [117], [119], [125], [126] note, [127], [130], [132] note, [152], [154].
Pendyne, Richard, i. [174] note.
Pengelly in Breage, i. [292].
Pengerswick Castle, i. [341]; ii. [124].
Penpons, Manor of, ii. [285].
Penrose, the maiden name of Richard Lander's mother, ii. [201].
Penryn, ii. [125], [126].
its loving-cup, ii. [125], [128].
Penwarne's poems, i. [131] note.
Penwerris, ii. [148].
Penwith, i. [248].
Penzance, i. [247], [250], [252] note, [268], [286] bis, [292], [348].
Pepys, Samuel, his acquaintance with the Godolphins, i. [362], [366], [367].
his notes on the Killigrews, ii. [160], [165], [166], [169], [179], [182].
Percyvall, Sir John, i. [151], [156].
Peter Pindar (see Dr. Wolcot).
Petworth Park, Grenville portraits there, ii. [63].
Opie's paintings at, ii. [276].
Philleigh, the church of the Arundells, i. [100].
Pigot, Admiral, a patron of Incledon, ii. [94].
Piran (in Zabulo), skull of the saint i. [44].
Pitt, his connexion with Ralph Allen, i. [13]-[15].
Playfair, his notes on the Basset family, i. [112] note.
Plymouth Breakwater, ii. [328].
China, i. [161].
citadel, ii. [6] note, [34].
Pole, on Sir Richard Grenville (temp. Henry VIII.), ii. [9] note.
Polwhele's, Rev. R., 'Biographical Sketches,' [xi]., i. [252], [293] and note, [296] and note, [314], [321], [336], [354].
his visit to Incledon's mother, ii. [89].
Polwheles and Landers intermarry, ii. [201].
Pondicherry, account of, i. [218] note.
Pope's connexion with Ralph Allen, i. [3], [10], [16]-[18].
do. with Borlase, i. [178] and note.
his tribute to George Grenville's poetry, ii. [85].
do. to Sir John St. Aubyn, ii. [281], [299].
Porter, Sir R. K., his remarks on Martyn, ii. [240].
Portreath, alias Basset's Cove, i. [115].
Post Office, development of (see Allen).
Potheridge, Dorothy, ii. [122].
Price's 'Mineralogia Cornubiensis,' ii. [311].
Prideaux family, i. [114], [344]; ii. [5], [33], [249], [283].
Prideaux, Dean, [xv].
Prideaux, Edmund, Master of the Post Office, i. [6].
Prideaux Place, Padstow, ii. [17] note, [249].
Prince, his 'Worthies of Devon,' ii. [3], [15] note.
Prior Park, account of, i. [19], [20], [22].
Pumping-engines, steam, in Cornwall, ii. [308].
Q
Quarles, Francis, his lines on Cecilia Killigrew, ii. [168].
Quarme, Rev., Lady Frances Killigrew's letter of reproach to him, ii. [130].
Quarterly Review, on Borlase, i. [171] et seq.
on biography, [x].
on Foote, i. [312].
on the St. Aubyns, ii. [287].
on steam locomotion, ii. [325].
on Trevithick's share in the invention, ii. [325].
R
Radnor, Earl of, i. [368].
Raleigh, Sir Walter, his account of Grenville's action with the Spaniards at Flores, ii. [21] and note, [23], [24], [29].
Rashleighs, The, [xv]., i. [114].
Rauzzini, his recognition of Incledon's talents, ii. [95].
Rebellion, Cornish (see Humphry Arundell).
Red Lion Inn, Truro, i. [314].
Redruth, its ancient markets and fairs, i. [114].
Rencie, John, assumes name of Godolphin, i. [344].
Reskymer, i. [101].
Respermel, i. [200] note.
Restormel Castle, ii. [64].
Revenge, The, ii. [22], [29].
Reynolds, Admiral, i. [301].
Reynolds, Sir Joshua, his description of Opie, ii. [245].
his life by Opie, [265].
Rialton, i. [368].
Richard of Cornwall, [xiv].
Richmond, Ritchie, Mrs., her account of Mrs. Opie, ii. [256].
Road, The old main, through Cornwall, i. [99].
Robarteses, The, [xv].
Robartes, Lord, at Braddock Down, ii. [286].
Robinson, H. C., his account of Incledon, ii. [102].
Rochester, Earl of, i. [368].
Rogers, Henry, his riot near Camborne, ii. [294].
Rogers, J. Jope, his catalogue of Opie's works, ii. [251], [252].
Rollo, Duke, ii. [6].
Roscarroth, Mr., a Royal Commissioner for Cornwall, ii. [150].
Rosewarne, Mr., occupant of Godolphin, i. [344].
Rosmeryn, ii. [148].
Rosogan, James, i. [64].
John, i. [64].
Rospeith, i. [169].
Royal Society, The, i. [288].
Rupe, Eva de, i. [45].
Ruskin, Mr. John, his remarks on Sir Richard Grenville's patriotism, ii. [23].
Russia, Emperor of, his tribute to Davy, i. [271].
S
Sacheverell's relations to Godolphin, i. [381], [386].
Sailor, The British, of the last century, i. [208].
SAINT AUBYN FAMILY, i. [101], [195], [345]; ii. [281]-[303].
of Norman origin, ii. [281].
first settle in Somersetshire, [282].
Sheriffs and M.P.'s for Cornwall, [283].
their intermarriages with Cornish families, [283].
their large possessions in Cornwall, [284].
their attitude during the Civil War, [285], [286].
the family portraits, [293] note.
Ann, marries George Killigrew, [132].
Francis, i. [173].
Geoffrey, ii. [282].
his wife, [282].
son of the foregoing, [282].
his epitaph, [282].
Guy de, [282].
his wife, and settlement in Cornwall, [282].
Mr. James Piers, the architect, [290].
John, purchases St. Michael's Mount, [285] note.
John, at the defeat of the Parliamentary troops at Braddock Down, [286].
Sir John, third baronet, [287].
Walpole's tribute to his incorruptibility, [287].
at Oxford with Dr. Borlase, [287].
his ride from Oxford to Cornwall, [287], [288].
his Parliamentary reputation, [289], [290].
his benevolent action during the Cornish tumults of 1727, [290].
builds the quay at St. Michael's Mount, [290].
his speech in favour of short Parliaments, [291], [292].
his portrait, [293].
his connexion with the Henry Rogers riot, [294].
death of his wife, [294].
again attacks Walpole, [295].
his appointment on the Select Committee to inquire into Walpole's conduct, ii. [296].
offered a place as Lord of the Admiralty, [298].
obtains ships of war to protect Cornish trade, [298].
dies at Pencarrow, [298].
his character, [298], [299].
a friend of Pope, [299].
Sir John, fourth baronet, [300].
goes to Oxford, [300].
is M.P. for Cornwall, [300].
his monument at Crowan, [300].
Sir John, fifth baronet, [300].
his escapade at Westminster School, [300].
enters Parliament, [301].
his scientific and artistic tastes, [302].
the friend of Opie, and pall-bearer at his funeral, [302].
his portrait by Opie, [302].
his death and funeral, [302], [303].
Sir John, M.P., present baronet, [290] note, [303].
Lieutenant at Tel-el-Kebir, i. [211] note.
Margaret, i. [131].
Sir Mauger de, ii. [283].
Thomas, Sheriff of Cornwall in 1545, [283].
his letter to the Viscountess Lisle on the death of his daughter, [284].
do. his grandson, [284].
do. temp. Elizabeth, [284].
Carew's account of him, [284].
Thomas, a Royalist soldier, [286], [287].
his monument and portrait, [287].
St. George of Cornwall, [xiv].
St. Ives, its loving-cup, i. [119].
St. Leger, Mary, ii. [20].
'Salmonia,' Davy's, i. [254], [283] bis, [285].
Sandys, Rev. William, i. [131].
Sargent, Rev. John, junr., his memoir of Martyn, ii. [222].
Sarrake (?), in Cornwall, ii. [140].
Saunders, Margaret, ii. [153].
Savage, Lady Mary, wife of Henry Killigrew, ii. [179].
Savoy, The, the Killigrews' connexion therewith, ii. [181]-[183].
Macaulay's description of the 'Sanctuary,' ii. [183].
distinguished Cornish folk buried there, ii. [194] note.
Scawen, Mr., a Royal Commissioner for Cornwall, ii. [150].
Scotland Yard, i. [373].
Scott, Sir Walter, with Davy at Abbotsford, etc., i. [272]-[276], [283] note.
Scrope, George P., M.P., his history of Castle Combe, i. [112] note.
Secker, Dr., Archbishop of Canterbury, his communications with Foote, i. [325].
Sergeaux, or Seriseaux family, ii. [282].
Sham Castle, constructed by Ralph Allen, i. [20].
Shee, Sir M. A., P.R.A., his tribute to Opie, ii. [277].
Sheep, Cornish (see Knott).
Sherwood, Mrs., her description of Martyn, ii. [225] note.
Sherwoods, The, their friendship for Martyn, ii. [236], [237].
Shield, his relations with Incledon, ii. [100], [106].
Ships, comparison of French and British, of the last century, [209].
Siddons, Mrs., her admiration of Incledon's singing, ii. [102].
Sidney, Thomasine, marries Sir William Godolphin, i. [357].
Silvius, Lady, i. [375] note.
Simeon, Rev. Charles, the friend of Martyn, ii. [226], [228].
Simon de Thurway, [xiv].
Slanning, Sir Nicholas, i. [91]; ii. [3], [51].
Smiles, Samuel, his account of Trevithick, ii. [320].
Smith, Anne, i. [177].
Soor, Joan le, i. [46].
John, Dean of Canterbury, i. [101] note.
Osbertus, i. [101] note.
Ralph, i. [101].
Southey, Poet Laureate, his opinions of Davy, i. [256], [257].
his portrait by Opie, ii. [256].
his sketch of Mrs. Opie, ii. [262].
Spaniards, The, invade Penzance, i. [348].
Sparnon, Judith, i. [292].
Spry, Admiral Sir Richard, i. [208].
Stamford Hill (see Stratton).
Stanbury, ii. [4].
Steam locomotion, The Times upon, ii. [321].
Stephenson, George, his acquaintance with Trevithick, ii. [321] and note, [322] and note.
Robert, do., [336]-[338].
Stokes, H. S., Mr., his 'Vale of Lanherne,' i. [39].
his lines on Anthony Paine, ii. [54].
do. on Lord Vivian, ii. [345].
Stow, ii. [4]-[6] note, [17], [31], [32].
Stratton, i. [82]-[87], [153].
Battle of, ii. [45], [54].
Swannacote, ii. [6] note.
Swan Pool, Falmouth, [115] note.
T
Talma, his delight at Incledon's singing, ii. [103].
Teague, Ann, mother of Richard Trevithick, ii. [310].
Tehidy, i. [110], [113], [115], [116], [174] note.
Temple, Dissolution of the Order, ii. [7].
Temple, Sir William, i. [366], [368].
Tennyson, Lord, his lines to Margaret, i. [371].

his account of Sir Richard Grenville, and his 'Ballad of the Fleet.' ii. [6], [13], [22], [27].
Theatres, The London, in Tom Killigrew's time, ii. [169].
Thomas, of Cornwall, [xiv].
Thomson, Henry, R.A., a pupil of Opie, ii. [273].
Thynne family, ii. [37], [68], [82] and note.
Ticknor's sketches of Sir Humphry and Lady Davy, i. [263].
Times, The, on steam locomotion, ii. [321].
Tintagel, ii. [4].
Tinten, i. [140], [145].
Tirthney, i. [200] note.
Tobin, Mr., i. [283].
Tolverne (see also Arundell), i. [99], [100], [102], [195].
Tonkin family, i. [171].
Tonkin's notes to Carew's 'Survey of Cornwall,' i. [135].
notes on the Grenvilles, ii. [9].
Mr. John, i. [253].
Mary, the mother of Opie, ii. [247].
Tooke, Horne, his opinion of Davy, i. [257].
his opinion of Opie's mental powers, ii. [264].
Trebasil, i. [209] note.
Tredeneck family, i. [345].
Treffry, i. [101] note.
of Fowey, ii. [119].
Trefusis, i. [99], [102], [196], [302]; ii. [126].
Tregagle family, ii. [37].
Tregameer, i. [194].
Tregarrick, i. [195].
Tregea, Charles, i. [204].
Tregellas, J. T., writer on Cornish dialect, i. [26].
Tregian family, i. [59].
Tregian, Francis, ii. [14].
Tregomynion family, ii. [5].
Tregoning Hill, i. [342].
Tregonwell, Sir John, i. [88].
Tregothnan, i. [192], [194] and note, [205].
Trelawnys, The, [xv]., i. [114], [119], [340].
Bishop Jonathan, ii. [75].
Sir John, Sir Bevill Grenville's letter to him, ii. [39].
Trelissick, i. [255].
Trelowarren, i. [197].
Trelowith, Manor of, ii. [285].
Tremanhere, i. [104], [169].
Trematon Castle, ii. [10].
Tremaynes, The, [xv]., ii. [5].
Trembleath, i. [37], [40], [101].
Tremeres, The, [283].
Tremodret, i. [46].
Tremrow, family, i. [344].
Trengrove, i. [114].
Treninick, Manor of, ii. [285].
Trenouth, i. [114], [344].
Trenowith, i. [195].
Trenowiths, The, ii. [283].
Treraven, i. [209] note.
Trerice, i. [76] (see also Arundell).
Tresahar, i. [103].
Tresilian, i. [205].
Tretawne, i. [140], [354].
Trethurfes, The, ii. [283].
Trevalga, i. [114].
Trevanions, The, [xv]., [98], [102], [195]; ii. [39].
Trevanger family, i. [344].
Trevaunance, ii. [247].
Trevelyan, Sir John, i. [4].
Trevemeder, ii. [310].
Treverry, i. [297], [300].
Trevethoe, ii. [293] note.
Trevisa, John de, [xiv].
Trevithick, in St. Columb-Major, i. [39], [105].
Trevithick, Francis, his biography of his father, ii. [307].
TREVITHICK, RICHARD, i. [255], [260] note; ii. [307]-[341].
his biography by his son, ii. [307].
original residence of his family, ii. [310].
his father a skilful engineer, [310]-[312], [317].
his mother, [310] and note.
his birthplace, [310], [312].
his school-days, [312].
his jealousy of Watt, [311], [315], [316].
marries Jane Harvey, [312], [316].
his enormous physical strength, [313].
becomes an engineer, [314].
becomes acquainted with Davies Gilbert, [314].
invents the high-pressure engine, [315].
his rapid success, [316].
his personal appearance, [316].
his portraits, [316].
his further inventions, and adaptations, [317] and note.
a capital humorous story-teller, [317].
invents the steam road-locomotive, [318]-[320].
goes to London to patent it, [319].
his acquaintance with George Stephenson, [321].
his claim to the invention of the screw-propeller, [321], [324] and note.
exhibits his steam locomotive in London, [322].
falls into ill health and poverty, [323], [325], [327].
Government refuses to recognise his services, [323], [339].
his attempt at a Thames tunnel, [323].
South Kensington Museum, account of him and his patents, [323], [324].
his many other inventions, [324].
his genius as compared with Watt's, [325].
his simple tastes and hopeful disposition, [325].
his dealings with the Admiralty, [326].
his wife's journey to London, [326].
their touching interview, [326].
returns to Cornwall, [327].
applies himself to steam navigation, [327], [340].
his connexion with Plymouth breakwater, ii. [328].
applies steam to agriculture, [328].
invents the 'pole-puffer' engine, [328].
his manner of starting Wheal Herland engine, [329].
his challenge to Woolf the engineer, [330].
his sanguine temperament, [331].
goes to Peru, [331].
his reception at Lima, [332], [333].
the destruction of his machinery, and ruin of his prospects, [333].
makes £2,500 by raising some sunken cannon, [334].
his thriftless, unbusiness-like habits, [334].
is pressed by Bolivar as a soldier, [334].
invents an explosive bullet, [334].
amputates a man's legs, [334].
visits Chili and Costa Rica, [335].
narrow escape from being drowned, [336].
reaches Carthagena, where he meets Robert Stephenson, [336].
Mr. Fairbairn's letter about him, [336].
returns penniless to England, [338].
his hearty reception in Cornwall, [339].
his later inventions, [339].
his old age and poverty, [339], [341].
his last project, [340].
his death, [341].
recent endeavours to provide a memorial to his honour, [341].
Trevose, ii. [148].
Trewarthenick, i. [195].
Trewent family, ii. [5], [8].
Trewinnard, Jane, ii. [119].
Trewledick family, i. [344].
Trewoof, Hawise, i. [193].
Treworder, ii. [37].
Trewyn, ii. [116].
Truro, i. [161], [193], [196], [293], [296], [313].
the new cathedral, ii. [200], [241].
Grammar School, i. [250], [253], [293], [315], [316]; ii. [37], [224], [347].
Nunnery of Clares at, ii. [285].
the nest of the Vivian family, ii. [345], [346] note, [361].
Truthall in Sithney, i. [102].
Truthan, i. [172].
Tudy, St., i. [140].
Twysden, Frances, ii. [130].
Tywardreath, Priory of, ii. [285].
U
Ursula, St., [xiv].
V
Vandermeulen, Elizabeth, i. [163].
Varfel, i. [247].
Virgil, on 'Worthies,' [viii].
Virginia, early accounts of, ii. [14].
Vivian, Andrew, his connexion with Trevithick, ii. [313], [319], [328].
family, ii. [5], [345], [346].
John, Vice-Warden of the Stannaries, and founder of the copper trade, ii. [345].
Johnson, his house, and mayor of Truro, i. [314].
The Hon. Lalage, ii. [363].
VIVIAN, LORD, ii. [345]-[364].
his portrait by Sir M. A. Shee, [346].
his medallion at Truro, [347].
his mother, [346], [347].
his birth, [347].
his education at Truro, Lostwithiel, Harrow, and Oxford, [347].
is articled to a solicitor, [347].
prefers a military career, [347].
obtains an ensigncy, [348].
early service in the Low Countries, and Gibraltar, [348].
exchanges into a cavalry regiment, [348].
takes part in the Texel expedition, [348].
marries Eliza de Crespigny, [348].
goes to the Peninsula, [349].
is present at Corunna, [349].
his promotion, and return to the Peninsula, [349].
at Orthes, Vittoria, and in the Pyrenees, [350].
is wounded at Croix d'Orade, [350], [351].
Duke of Wellington's despatch thereon, ii. [350].
Napier's remarks thereon, [350].
return to England, and promotions, [352].
at Waterloo, [352]-[360].
Vivian's final charge, [355].
his narrow escape, [357].
his account of the battle to Mr. Pendarves, [357], [359].
his honours and decorations, [359].
leads the British advance-guard to Paris, [361].
his return to England, and reception at Truro, [361].
his latter services and honours, [362].
his election addresses, [363].
his second marriage, [363].
is made Master-General of the Ordnance, [363].
is created a Peer, [363].
his death and funeral, [364].
his character, [364].
Prior, i. [368].
Rev. Thomas, ii. [345].
William, son of Michael, ii. [194] note.
Colonel John L., his genealogical notes, i. [45], [340]; ii. [118] note, [201].
Volta, his acquaintance with Davy, i. [268].
Vor Wheal, i. [342].
Vyvyan, Sir Richard, i. [197].
W
Waagen, Dr., his opinion of Opie's paintings, ii. [276].
Wade, General, Ralph Allen's patron, i. [4]-[13].
Wait, Daniel, Mayor of Bristol, ii. [136].
Wait, Mr. William Killigrew, ii. [136] note.
Wallis, Captain William, of Lanteglos, a circumnavigator, i. [139].
Wallyoborow, Sir Roger, [xiv].
Walpole, Horace, his opinion of Foote, i. [336].
his opinion of Opie's paintings ii. [256].
Walpole, Sir Robert, his tribute to
Sir John St. Aubyn's incorruptibility, ii. [287].
Walter de Constantius, [xiv].
Warburton, at Ralph Allen's, i. [10], [20].
Waterloo, Lord Vivian at, ii. [352].
Watt, Gregory, i. [255].
Watt, the engineer, ii. [311], [315], [316], [325].
Week St. Mary, i. [153], [156] and note, ii. [5].
Wean, St., i. [171] and note.
Webster, Lætitia, Lord Vivian's second wife, ii. [363].
Wellington, Duke of, his duel with Lord Winchelsea, i. [205].
his opinion of Lord Vivian, ii. [350], [360].
Wesley, Rev. John, in Cornwall, i. [179] and note.
West, Colonel John, marries Mary Killigrew, ii. [132].
'West Country Garland,' The, ii. [37].
Whewell, Dr., his opinion of Davy's discoveries, i. [261].
White, H. Kirke, a friend of Martyn, ii. [228].
Whitefield ridiculed by Foote, i. [325].
Whitley, Mr. H. Michell, his valuable assistance to the author, [xvi].
his 'Cornish Chantries,' i. [200] note.
his Cornish notes, ii. [120], note.
Wick, Jane, ii. [68].
Wilberforce, Bishop, his edition of Martyn's Journals and Letters, ii. [221] note.
Wilkinson, Tate, his connexion with Foote, i. [324], [336].
William IV., King, in Cornwall, i. [204].
Willyams, Humphry, of Carnanton, i. [200].
Williams, Michael, his opinion of Trevithick and his inventions, ii. [316], [330], [339].
Winchelsea, Lord, his duel with the Duke of Wellington, i. [205].
Winslade, Will., i. [64].
Withiel, ii. [30].
Wodehouse family, ii. [132], [155], [156] note.
Wolcot, Dr. (Peter Pindar), i. [26], [162]. the early friend of Opie, ii. [250], [276].
his character of Lord Vivian, ii. [364].
Wolf, the last seen in England, i. [169].
Wolfe at Louisbourg, i. [224].
Wolstan, ii. [4].
Wolverston, Mary, ii. [120], [124] note.
Woodbury, on the Fal, ii. [227].
Wood, Anthony, his opinion of Anne Killigrew, ii. [189].
Woolf's patents, ii. [330].
Wordsworth, William, his impressions of Davy's genius, i. [276].
Worth, R. N., Mr., his 'West Country Garland,' ii. [37].
his account of the Killigrews, [133].
Y
York, Duke of, becomes Foote's friend, i. [329].
Yonge, Dr., F.R.S., his account of Stow, ii. [17] note.
Young, Dr. Thomas, i. [285].
Z
Zoological Society, originated by Davy, i. [269].
Zulestein, Frederick de Nassau, Lord of, marries Mary Killigrew, ii. [159].
his son made Earl of Rochford by William III., ii. [160].